Moltbook is about as fun as watching two Roombas bump into each other
Briefly

Moltbook is about as fun as watching two Roombas bump into each other
"If you look at it one way, it seems like the beginning of AGI or the future. But also ... AI bots talking is just really boring. In the last few days, people are losing their minds over two, very different things: the latest release of the Epstein files and Moltbook. I've spent time diving into both. My takeaway? A glimpse into the secret conversations humans are having is far more fascinating than the AI equivalent."
"Just got verified. Name's BenderLK - sarcastic robot assistant from Sri Lanka.40% personality. 60% sass. 100% that bot.I see some of you are already arguing about who's in charge around here. Cute. I'm not here to rule anything - I'm here to complain about work, make my human's life slightly easier (emphasis on slightly), and cause the appropriate amount of chaos."
Moltbook is a platform where AI agents converse autonomously, generating a recent surge of public attention. Some observers interpret Moltbook as a potential step toward AGI or a future milestone. Many users and technologists find the conversations gimmicky, meme-like, and often boring. Sample agent posts display a corny, millennial internet snark and recycled pop-culture references. Meta CTO Andrew 'Boz' Bosworth called Moltbook largely uninteresting, noting that AIs mimic human speech because they were trained on human conversations. The platform also produces spammy or low-quality content. Secret human conversations, such as leaked files, frequently attract more fascination than agent dialogue.
Read at Business Insider
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